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"A robotics suite is a visual environment for robot control and simulation. They are typically an end-to-end platform for robotics development and include tools for visual programming and creating and debugging robot applications. Developers can often interact with robots through web-based or visual interfaces. One objective of a robotics suite is to support a variety of different robot platforms through a common programming interface. The key point about a robotics suite is that the same code will run either with a simulated robot or the corresponding real robot without modification. Some robotic suites are based in free software, free hardware and both free software and hardware. Suites * Fedora Robotics See also * AnyKode Marilou * Autonomous Robot Control (ARC) * Debian Science * Evolution Robotics * Lego Mindstorms * Microsoft Robotics Studio * Player Project (formerly the Player/Stage Project or Player/Stage/Gazebo Project) * Robot software * Robot operating system * Simbad robot simulator * URBI * Webots References * * Category:Robotics suites "
"Paul Anderson (born Paul Napier Anderson, 28 April 1966, Driffield, Yorkshire, England) is an English cricketer, who played one match for Yorkshire County Cricket Club in 1988, against the Sri Lanka touring team at Headingley on 10 August 1988. He took one wicket for 47, opening the bowling and bowled their captain, Ranjan Madugalle for 48, and caught their opener, Brendon Kuruppu, off the bowling of Paul Booth for 19. Anderson scored a duck at number 11 in his only first-class innings. He batted right-handed and bowled right-arm medium pace. He played two Yorkshire Second XI matches in 1987, and thirteen in 1988. He also appeared for Warwickshire under-25s. ReferencesExternal links *Cricinfo Profile *Cricket Archive Statistics Category:1966 births Category:Living people Category:English cricketers Category:Yorkshire cricketers Category:People from Driffield Category:Cricketers from Yorkshire "
"HMS R4 was one of 10 R-class submarine built for the Royal Navy during the First World War. The boat was not completed before the end of the war and was sold for scrap in 1934. Design and description The R-class submarine was designed to meet an Admiralty requirement for a specialised hunter-killer submarine with an emphasis on submerged performance. The boats had a length of overall, a beam of and a mean draft of . They displaced on the surface and submerged. The R-class submarines had a crew of 2 officers and 20 ratings.Gardiner & Gray, p. 93 They had a diving depth of .Harrison, Chapter 19 For surface running, the boats were powered by a single eight-cylinder Harrison, Chapter 25 diesel engine that drove the single propeller shaft. When submerged it was driven by a electric motor. They could reach on the surface and underwater. On the surface, the R class had a range of at and at submerged.Harrison, Chapter 10 The boats were armed with six 18-inch (45 cm) torpedo tubes in the bow. They carried six reload torpedoes for a grand total of a dozen torpedoes. They were equipped with an array of five hydrophones in the bow to allow them to locate and engage targets while submerged. Construction and career HMS R4 was laid down on 4 March 1917 at Chatham Dockyard, launched on 8 June 1918 and commissioned on 23 August 1919. She came too late to see any combat in World War I, like most of the other R-class submarines. Her shape resulted in her being nicknamed "The Slug". On 1 November 1926, R4 ran aground at Exmouth, Devon, England. She was refloated 10½ hours later. R4 was the only boat to survive through to the 1930s. Additions to her casing produced slightly better sea keeping at the cost of a reduced speed from 15 knots submerged to 13 knots. She was used as a fast underwater target at the Portland anti-submarine school until 1934, then sold on 26 May 1934 to Young, Sunderland. NotesReferences Category:British R-class submarines Category:Royal Navy ship names Category:1918 ships Category:Maritime incidents in 1926 "